RESUMEN
Atomic-level knowledge of protein-ligand interactions allows a detailed understanding of protein functions and provides critical clues to discovering molecules regulating the functions. While recent innovative deep learning methods for protein structure prediction dramatically increased the structural coverage of the human proteome, molecular interactions remain largely unknown. A new database, HProteome-BSite, provides predictions of binding sites and ligands in the enlarged 3D human proteome. The model structures for human proteins from the AlphaFold Protein Structure Database were processed to structural domains of high confidence to maximize the coverage and reliability of interaction prediction. For ligand binding site prediction, an updated version of a template-based method GalaxySite was used. A high-level performance of the updated GalaxySite was confirmed. HProteome-BSite covers 80.74% of the UniProt entries in the AlphaFold human 3D proteome. Predicted binding sites and binding poses of potential ligands are provided for effective applications to further functional studies and drug discovery. The HProteome-BSite database is available at https://galaxy.seoklab.org/hproteome-bsite/database and is free and open to all users.
Asunto(s)
Bases de Datos de Proteínas , Descubrimiento de Drogas , Proteoma , Humanos , Sitios de Unión , Ligandos , Unión Proteica , Reproducibilidad de los ResultadosRESUMEN
The 26S proteasome comprises 20S catalytic and 19S regulatory complexes. Approximately half of the proteasomes in cells exist as free 20S complexes; however, our mechanistic understanding of what determines the ratio of 26S to 20S species remains incomplete. Here, we show that glucose starvation uncouples 26S holoenzymes into 20S and 19S subcomplexes. Subcomplex affinity purification and quantitative mass spectrometry reveal that Ecm29 proteasome adaptor and scaffold (ECPAS) mediates this structural remodeling. The loss of ECPAS abrogates 26S dissociation, reducing degradation of 20S proteasome substrates, including puromycylated polypeptides. In silico modeling suggests that ECPAS conformational changes commence the disassembly process. ECPAS is also essential for endoplasmic reticulum stress response and cell survival during glucose starvation. In vivo xenograft model analysis reveals elevated 20S proteasome levels in glucose-deprived tumors. Our results demonstrate that the 20S-19S disassembly is a mechanism adapting global proteolysis to physiological needs and countering proteotoxic stress.